Sunday, 26 August 2018

Stablecoin Grand Prix

The race is heating up to build a less volatile cryptocurrency

Coindesk Weekly
August 26, 2018
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Coindesk Weekly

Stablecoin Grand Prix

The race is on to build the best "stablecoin" or a cryptocurrency with built-in mechanisms aimed at reducing price volatility. But what if a central bank beats the crypto world to the punch? Michael J. Casey explores the possibilities for a new era of currency competition. 

Read more in THE TAKEAWAY below.

TOP TRENDS ON COINDESK

ETF turnaround?

On Wednesday, the SEC struck down a total of 9 proposed bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs). All three orders stated that the proposals didn’t sufficiently guarantee protections against fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices.

The rejections — many of which occurred before their final deadlines — came after an earlier disapproval on a bitcoin ETF from investors Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss.

But in an unexpected twist, the SEC turned around and said that it would review those disapproval orders -- thus reinflating the hopes of the bitcoin ETF faithful.  

Yet does this mean the SEC is going to suddenly greenlight a product that it has long been apprehensive towards? Prevailing wisdom suggests "don't hold your breath," but the fact that the rejections were stopped in their tracks just a day after being first issued suggests that there is a glimmer of hope -- maybe. 

To catch up on the story thus far and to learn more about what makes a bitcoin ETF, read our full breakdown of how it all works here

China déjà vu 

Have we been here before?

The past week has seen new restrictions imposed by Chinese regulators in the crypto-related media and events space. 

On Tuesday, several blockchain and cryptocurrency media accounts weren banned on the messenger app WeChat. These include Jinse, Deepchain, Huobi News and CoinDaily.

On Wednesday, the financial services department of Beijing's Chaoyang district circulated a missive prohibiting events related to cryptocurrencies in shopping malls, hotels, restaurants, and office buildings in downtown Beijing. 

On Thursday, the China National Fintech Risk Rectification Office announced plans to block access to more than 100 overseas crypto exchanges. Authorities have identified 124 trading sites with overseas IP addresses that are still available in China.

Finally, on Friday five high-level watchdogs issued a joint warning against initial coin offerings as ways to speculate on cryptocurrencies.

While it's not quite the same as what happened in 2017, this week's events do call to mind last year's tubulence. 

In September of last year, the People's Bank of China -- the country's central bank -- issued a ban on initial coin offerings (ICOs), a move that came amid a wider crackdown on perceived digital fraud. 

By the end of the fall, the country's "Big 3" crypto trading platforms had closed their doors and moved to sunnier shores. 

Does this mean we're on the cusp of another crackdown season? Only time will tell. 

Rocky IPO road

Chinese mining giant Bitmain's effort to hold an initial public offering (IPO) seems to get more complicated by the day. 

The company is hoping to raise billions of dollars through the sale of shares, but the company -- which provides cryptocurrency mining hardware, mining pools and hosted services -- has been on the defensive in recent days. 

For example, analysts of Alliance Bernstein have argued that Bitmain's "cash flow appears to be questionable and the company may be gradually losing technological edge."

The researchers note that Bitmain's revenue in 2017 fell after the company stored a large number of its miners' components instead of selling them, and declining cryptocurrency prices further reduced the revenue. The company also holds about 5.7 percent of the total supply of bitcoin cash. 

More bad news: Tencent Holdings and SoftBank Group have denied involvement in Bitmain's pre-IPO funding. At the same time, at least one major company, China International Capital Corporation (CICC), hasn't denied its participation, but also hasn't confirmed it.

Does this mean that Bitmain's IPO is kaput? Not by a long shot -- but the situation does raise eyebrows about the manner in which this public debut is being pursued. 
 
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QUOTE OF THE WEEK

This will be a long education process that may take years, but in a space filled with scams and transient projects, I feel at peace knowing that I plan to be here long after the noise has died down and the 'get rich quick' types have had their fill. They can have their fun building mounds of cash, but I'm building the future.

– IOST co-founder Sa Wang writing for CoinDesk about what it's like to be a woman in China's get-rich-quick crypto culture.

The Takeaway

WHAT REALLY MATTERS

Michael J. Casey is the chairman of CoinDesk's advisory board and a senior advisor for blockchain research at MIT's Digital Currency Initiative.

With blockchain platforms being tested for various business processes, prospective enterprise users that are unwilling to accept a volatile cryptocurrency will often complain that a key piece is missing from the platform: a stable, digital medium of exchange.

Hence the race, currently underway, to create a viable “stablecoin.”

Many tech teams, such those at Basecoin, are developing decentralized algorithms intended to peg the value of a crypto-asset to an external reference price such as a fiat currency like the dollar. Others, such as Saga, are building collateralized reserve models, offering guaranteed, fixed-price convertibility into an alternative store of value – also, such as the dollar. Based on the controversy surrounding Tether, the biggest stablecoin, it’s fair to say that a widely trusted system does not yet exist.

Here’s an alternative vision: What if the race is won by a central bank? Digitizing fiat is arguably easier than pegging to fiat. What it needs is buy-in from officialdom.

The Bank of Thailand moved the world a small step closer to that solution last week. It announced that, in partnership with eight financial institutions, it is developing a digital currency based on R3's Corda distributed ledger protocol.

We’ll see how the Thai project evolves, but the purpose for now appears quite narrowly focused on a specific use case: facilitating interbank transfers among institutions operating within the country’s capital markets. Although limited to Thailand, it would add in the monetary piece that’s been missing from other distributed ledger initiatives to streamline securities settlement, such as that at the U.S. settlement and clearing agency, the DTCC.

However, it’s not hard to imagine that if Thailand’s or another country’s “wholesale” central-bank digital currency experiment shows signs of success there will be pressure to expand these so-called CBDC models to a wider community of users.

Expanding access to CBDC

With blockchain-based solutions for supply chains now moving from proofs of concept to implementation, with a lot of that activity in Thailand’s neighborhood, businesses could start to seek digital fiat solutions to these new models of automated trade. This will, of course, be limited to in-country transactions, but if prospective decentralized, smart contract tools such as atomic swaps , currently being explored for blockchain assets, can also be applied to digital fiat currencies, instantaneous cross-border CBDC exchanges might become a reality.

And despite concerns about financial instability expressed by the Bank of International Settlements, a central bank-owned body that coordinates activity among its members, I think it’s fair to assume a fully retail CBDC will one day exist somewhere.

The BIS' concerns primarily lie with the potential threat to the banking system from money fleeing short-term deposits into CBDC wallets. But that position presupposes banks should continue to play a central role in our payments systems. Many central bankers, who were blindsided by the problems caused by too-big-to-fail banks during the financial crisis, take a different view: that our dependence on for-profit private institutions to manage our monetary system is the very cause of the systemic risks to which our society has long been subject.

No lesser figure than former Bank of England Governor Mervyn King has argued forcefully about the need to reform the bank-centric financial system. And although his successor, Mark Carney, has soured on the idea of a digital pound, it’s noteworthy that BOE researchers, among the first to explore CBDC ideas, initially explored the potential benefits of removing banks from payments by ending their privileged access to central bank reserves.

A world of competing currencies

If this future does come to pass, it will be a long way from that envisaged by crypto developers who want to remove central banks from the equation. It’s even further from the vision of bitcoin enthusiasts, who see the need for a fully censorship-resistant currency with a monetary policy that cannot be altered by policymakers.

But all will not be lost for monetary innovators. The act of digitizing currencies – whether by central banks or by crypto developers – is likely to lead to increased global competition across currencies, as access and the cost of trading them becomes more efficient. That will put central banks themselves under pressure to develop currencies that people want to use.

The competition won’t only be among different countries’ currencies. With the help of Lightning and/or other Layer 2 solutions, cryptocurrencies will become more scalable and can present themselves as one of a number of options.

I see the scenario eventually evolving into something like the vision of Austrian economist Friedrich Hayek, a favorite of libertarians, who foresaw a world of competing private currencies emerging. It’s just that this one would entail competition between crypto- and government-run digital currencies.

Hopefully out of that competitive soup something that best serves humanity will arise.

Of course, this isn’t happening tomorrow. It’s premature to place all-out bets on any kind of currency solution becoming the standard.

But to assume that the world of money won’t change at all is also foolhardy. These forces will come to bear in ways that will be difficult for any actors, public or private, to control.

Protecting people's interests

When that change starts to happen, it’s critical that we, the people, provide input into how these systems evolve. A world of competing digital currencies isn’t necessarily a utopia.

As I argued in a previous column, crypto tokens have in some cases worsened society’s problems with truth in social media, prompting tribes of specific token holders to fiercely defend their coin against valid criticism. Imagine the same thing happening with fiat digital currencies promoted as investments by dictatorships.

We might just be getting a test of that with Venezuela’s move to peg the bolivar to its new digital currency, the Petro. The government of President Nicolas Maduro has long employed an aggressive propaganda campaign in favor its tragically failed policies. Imagine if he gets a team of Petro-holding trolls to amp up that campaign.

Digital fiat currency could also become an alarming surveillance tool. Already, the concept of China's "social score" system is raising concerns in that country. Add traceable digital payments to that kind of model and something even more invasive emerges.

Still, competitive pressures might also help us here. As I’ve previously argued, privacy is vital to good, functioning, fungible currency systems. So too, naturally, is broad adoption.

If we can create a world of genuine choices across currencies, it’s reasonable to assume that people will gravitate toward those that don’t entail surveillance and aren’t used as propaganda tools.

Will cryptocurrencies do a better job of achieving these standards? Possibly. But it depends on their design. There are plenty of bad altcoins out there.

Still, if a cryptocurrency, whether bitocin or an alternative with a different monetary policy, attains scalability and includes robust privacy protections, there’s still a very decent chance it could eventually outcompete government currencies.

Either way, let’s bring on the competition. May the best coin win.

— Michael J. Casey

BEYOND COINDESK...

BLOOMBERG: Bloomberg recently recapped a panel discussion focused on crypto from the Association for Professional Responsibility Lawyers.

The main question was: how would opportunity to receive cryptocurrency as pay affect legal ethics? It's a curious line of inquiry, given that cryptocurrencies are considered a form of (intangible) property according to the Internal Revenue Service.

And as one panelist put it, accepting bartered property as a fee for legal services -- "whether chickens or cryptocurrency...has always been part of practicing law."

With states like Nebraska having already given its approval to the idea, it's no far-fetched to suggested that lawyers elsewhere may accept crypto for their services. 

MEDIUM: Journalist Jeff Wise tackles the question of Tether's USDT token as a measure of price for other cryptocurrencies. Talking about the business model of a coin which -- by definition -- can't yield profit, Wise asks: why would anyone even want to pursue this kind of business model?

Wise's deep dive into Tethe, as well as its creators' motives and ways of doing business, ultimately reaches a key question: is the price of bitcoin based on anything at all

FINANCIAL TIMES: The newspaper analyzes what has been happening to the cryptocurrency market since the beginning of 2018.

Trading interest has now waned and bitcoin investors have retreated to holding in hopes of sunnier -- or bullish -- circumstances, experts say. 

WHAT WE'VE BEEN UP TO

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